Poor Celia is looking scraggly, I divided her and then Romeo ate four of her remaining pitchers. But, she's showing me her flowers will have lots of color, even when her leaves are still green from dormancy :).
Celia has started dropping pollen from her anthers, so I pollinated her and took some celebratory shots with the good camera :).
More on how this flower has designed itself to prevent self pollination, unless some fool like me interferes, found here:
I bet I found the species of purple pitcher plant that runs strongest in Celia's veins. Sarracenia rosea, Burk's pitcher plant. The only one with pink flowers, hardy (she's survived many gardening setbacks, even disastrous ones), and there are veinless and semi-veinless varieties. She's ticking off even more of these traits, she might not even be a hybrid!
The only one with pink petals, and look at my avatar. How appropriate this one is my favorite.
Okay, Celia, time for your dramatic lighting closeup! Sarracenia rosaea. Even your scientific name is beautiful.
Stunning blossom
@LnzyHou I'd say thank you, but all I did really was watch. Anyway, I want to make 50 of her now, and fill the place with her blooms :).
How exotic & beautiful.
@LnzyHou She's so worth the effort of keeping pure water on hand :).
Wait, is this the same Celia we met recently? She’s growing!🌸
@ATXJane Yup, she's the one :). Leaves are faded from dormancy. Now that she has bloomed, I'm pretty sure she's not a hybrid, this species description fits a lot of her growth pattern, including sometimes having no veins with a gradient, and sometimes having light veining. Even the shorter flower stem and larger flower fits the description. I can't wait to see the range of potential in her seedlings :).
She’s a keeper. So pretty.
Just gave her the sniff test (some Sarracenia flowers smell like cat pee), and she smells sweet, almost rose like :). I can't wait to meet her seedlings.